
After Miscarriage: Husband's Affair
Chapter 1
The pain came in waves, each one stronger than the last. I clutched my abdomen, feeling something warm and wet between my legs as I stumbled toward the bathroom of our penthouse. The world tilted sideways as I collapsed against the cold marble floor.
"Hello? 911? I need an ambulance," I gasped into my phone, my voice barely recognizable through the tears. "I'm pregnant... seven months... I think I'm losing my baby."
The paramedics found me there, curled around my belly as if I could physically hold my child inside me. Their faces were kind but professional as they lifted me onto a stretcher. The sirens wailed through the night as we raced to Harper Memorial Hospital—ironically named after my family's foundation.
"Ma'am, we need to contact your next of kin," the paramedic said, her eyes concerned above her mask.
"My husband," I whispered, fumbling for my phone. "Caspian Stewart."
I dialed his number, praying he would answer despite the late hour. The call went straight to voicemail.
"Caspian," I choked out, "I'm being taken to the hospital. Something's wrong with the baby. Please... call me back."
The doctor's words blurred together as they wheeled me through sterile corridors. "Significant blood loss"... "trying to stabilize"... "prepare for surgery." I caught fragments of their urgent conversation, but all I could think about was Caspian's smiling face when we first saw our baby's ultrasound. "We're going to be parents," he had whispered, kissing my still-flat stomach.
Where was he now?
The surgery was a blur of bright lights and masked faces. When I woke, a nurse with kind eyes held my hand. "I'm so sorry, Mrs. Stewart," she said softly. "We couldn't save the baby."
The emptiness that followed was unlike anything I'd ever experienced. Not just the physical hollow where my child had been, but the absence of the future I'd imagined. The nursery we'd painted together. The little shoes I'd hidden in my drawer.
Hour after hour passed. Nurses came and went. I stared at the ceiling, too numb to cry anymore. I called Caspian again. And again. Each time, the same cheerful voicemail greeting.
"Mrs. Stewart," a nurse said gently around noon, "is there someone else we can call for you?"
"He's at a meditation retreat," I explained, my voice hollow. "Three days of silence. No phones allowed."
She squeezed my hand, her eyes reflecting pity.
It was nearly midnight when the door to my hospital room finally opened. Caspian stood there, his tall frame silhouetted against the hallway light. For one brief moment, relief flooded through me.
"Caspian," I whispered, reaching for him.
He moved to my bedside, his expression unreadable in the dim light. "Presley," he said, his voice oddly detached. "I came as soon as I could."
"You missed thirteen calls," I said, my voice breaking. "Our baby died, Caspian."
He nodded, as if I'd told him it might rain tomorrow. "I know. The hospital called the retreat center."
"And you didn't come right away?" The words escaped before I could stop them.
"I was in the middle of a breakthrough," he said, his eyes lighting up with an enthusiasm that cut through me like glass. "Yasmin—she's this incredible spiritual counselor—she helped me reach a level of consciousness I've never experienced before."
I stared at him, unable to process his words. "Our child is dead," I repeated, each word deliberate.
"I know, and I'm sorry for your suffering," he said, taking my hand with clinical gentleness. "But Yasmin helped me understand that these attachments are what keep us bound to worldly pain."
"Attachments?" I echoed, disbelief coloring my voice. "You mean our baby? Our marriage?"
"The physical plane is an illusion, Presley," he continued, his eyes bright with fervor. "What happened is simply a lesson in detachment. If you could just meet Yasmin, she could help you understand—"
"Get out," I whispered, pulling my hand away.
Three days later, I stood in the nursery, running my fingers over the crib we'd assembled together. The pale yellow walls seemed to mock me now. I opened the closet where tiny clothes hung in neat rows, tags still attached.
Caspian found me there, clutching a tiny sweater to my chest.
"Presley," he said cautiously, "we need to talk about the future."
I turned to face him, something hardening inside me. "There is no future, Caspian. Not for us."
"What are you saying?" His brow furrowed.
"I'm filing for divorce," I said, my voice steadier than I expected.
"Don't be ridiculous," he scoffed. "You're emotional right now. You're still attached to—"
"To what?" I interrupted, my voice rising. "To you? To the baby we lost while you were sitting cross-legged with some guru named Yasmin?"
His face hardened. "You don't understand what I'm trying to achieve. This spiritual journey—"
"Is more important than your wife and child," I finished for him. "I understand perfectly now."
I walked past him, the divorce papers already prepared in my mind. Behind me, I heard him call out, "Presley, you need to transcend this suffering!"
But there was no transcending this betrayal. Only moving through it, one painful step at a time.
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